Lesson 2 Fable of the Lazy Teen-ager
1、One day last fall, I ran out of file folders and went to the local drugstore to buy more. I put a handful of folders on the counter and asked a clerk, in his late teens, how much they cost. “I don’t know,” he answered sullenly. “I guess a buck each.”
2、“A dollar a piece?” I said. “That can’t be right.” The clerk shrugged.
3、Another clerk — an old Asian woman—told me the price was 12 cents apiece. I returned to the counter, where a teen-age girl was now at the cash register. I counted the folders. “Twenty-three at 12 cents each,” I said. “That’s $2.76 before tax.”
4、“You did that in your head?” she asked in amazement. “How can you do that?”
5、“It’s magic,” I said.
6、“Really?” she asked.
7、No modestly educated adult can fail to be upset by such an experience. While our children seem better-natured than ever, they are so ignorant—and so ignorant of their ignorance—that they terrify me. In a class of 60 juniors and seniors at a private college where I recently taught, not one student could consistently write a short paper without misspellings. Not one.
8、But this is just a tiny sliver of the problem. The ability to perform even the simplest computations is only a memory among many students I see, and their knowledge of world history of geography is zilch.
9、Moreover, there is a chilling complacency ① about all this ignorance. The attitude was summed up by a friend’s bright, lazy 16-year-old son, who explained why he preferred not to go to U.C.L.A. “I don’t want to have to compete with Asians,” he said.
“They work hard and know everything.”
10、In fact, this young man will have to compete with Asians whether he wants to or not. He cannot live forever on the financial, material and human capital accumulated by his forebears. At some point soon, his intellectual laziness will seriously affect his way Fable of the Lazy Teen-ager Lesson 2of life. It will also affect the safety, security and prosperity of the rest of us. A modern industrial state cannot function with a slothful ② , ignorant labor force. Planes will crash on carrier decks. Computers will jam. Cars will break down.
11、To drive this message home to such young Americans, I have a humble suggestion: a movie, or TV series, dramatizing just how difficult it was for this country to get where it is — and how easily it could all be lost. I offer the following fable.
12、As the story opens, our hero, Kevin Hanley 2010, a 17-year-old high-school senior, is sulking ③ in his room. His parents insist he study for his European-history test. He wants to go shopping for headphones for his portable CD player. The book he is forced to read—The Wealth of Nations—puts him to sleep.
13、Kevin dreams it is 1835, and he is his own great-great-great-grandfather at 17, a peasant in County Kerry, Ireland. He lives in a sod hut and sleeps next to a pig. He is always hungry and must beg for food. His greatest wish is to learn to read and write so he might get a job as a clerk. With steady wages, he would be able to feed himself and help his family. But Hanley’s poverty allows no leisure for such luxuries as going to school. Without education and money, he is powerless. His only hope lies in his children. If they are educated, they will have a better life.
14、Our fable fast-forwards, and Kevin Hanley 2010 is now his own great-grandfather,Kevin Hanley 1928. He, too, is 17 years old, and he works in a steel mill in Pittsburgh.His father emigrated from Ireland and helped build the New York City subway. Kevin Hanley 1928 is far better off than either his father or his grandfather. He can read and write, which means he can follow the instruction for operating an open-hearth furnace ④ . His wages are incomparably better than anything his ancestors had in Ireland.
15、Even so, Kevin Hanley 1928 believes real hope lies in the future generations and knows that education is the key. He had to go to work before he could finish high school. His son will finish so that he won’t have to work in a factory.
16、Next Kevin Hanley 2010 dreams that he is Kevin Hanley 1945, his own grandfather, fighting against the Japanese army. He is always hot, always hungry,always scared. One night in a foxhole, he tells a buddy why he is there: “So my son and his son can live in peace and security. When I get back, I’ll work hard and send my boy to college so he can live by his brains instead of his back.”
17、Then Kevin Hanley 2010 is his own father, Kevin Hanley 1986, who studies all the time so he can get into college and law school. He lives in a tract house in a new development. He has never seen anything but peace and plenty. He tells his girlfriend that when he has a son, he won’t make him study all the time, as his father makes him.
18、At that point, Kevin Hanley 2010 wakes up, shaken by his dream. He is relieved to be away from Ireland and the steel mill and the war. He goes back to sleep.
19、When he dreams again, he is his own son, Kevin 2035. He lives in a virtual stockade. There is gunfire all day and all night. His whole generation forgot why there even was law, so there is none. People pay no attention to politics, and government offers no services to the working class.
20、Kevin 2035’s father, who is of course Kevin 2010 himself, works as a door keeper in a factory owned by the Japanese. Kevin 2035 is a porter in a hotel for wealthy Europeans and Asians. Public education stops at the sixth grade. There is no tax base to pay for decent schools. Americans have long since stopped demanding good education for their children.
21、An elite cadre of Americans, who have educated themselves, hold highly paid jobs working for the Europeans and Asians who dominate American life. The rest are either drones for foreign investors — who consider Americans stupid and lazy, fit only for manual labor—or criminals who supply drugs to the numbed workers.
22、The last person Kevin 2010 sees in his dream is his own grandson. Kevin 2060lives in a slum ⑤ . There is no heat, no plumbing, no privacy.
23、Kevin 2060 has no useful skills. Machines built in Japan and Taiwan do all the complex work, and there is little menial work to be done. Without education, without discipline, he cannot command even a subsistence wage. He lives by rifling through trash piles.
24、In a word, he lives much as Kevin Hanley 1835 did in Ireland. But Kevin 2060gets a break. He is befriended by a visiting Japanese anthropologist ⑥ studying the decline of America. The man explains to Kevin that when a man has no money,education can supply the human capital necessary to start acquiring financial capital.Hard work, education, saving and discipline can do anything. “This is how we rose from the ashes after you defeated us in a war about a hundred years ago.”
25、“America beat Japan in war?” asks Kevin 2060. He is astounded. It seems as impossible as Brazil defeating the United States would sound in 1990. Kevin 2060vows that if he ever has children, he will make sure they work and study and learn and discipline themselves. “To be able to make a living by one’s mind instead of by stealing,” he says. “That would be a miracle.”
26、When Kevin 2010 wakes up, next to him is his copy of The Wealth of Nations. He opens it at random and reads: “A man without proper use of the intellectual faculties of a man is, if possible, more contemptible than even a coward and seems to be mutilated and deformed in a still more essential part of the character of human nature.”Fable of the Lazy Teen-ager Lesson 2o t s e N
27、Kevin’s father walks in, “All right, son,” he says, “Let’s go look at that stereo stuff.”
28、“Sorry, Pop,” Kevin 2010 says, “I have to study.”
(1,383 words)
Exercises
Ⅰ . How well did you read?
1. [Draw a conclusion] What was the author unsatisfied with?
A. The clerk was impolite.
B. Young American didn’t study hard.
C. The drug store was dirty and messy.
2. [Get the purpose ] Why did the author write this fable?
A. To introduce the American history.
B. To predict what will happen in the future.
C. To tell the young the importance of study.
3. [Focus on details] Which of the following is True to Kevin 2060?
A. He works as a manager with a good salary.
B. He can’t believe America once beat Japan.
C. He is a professor in a famous university.
4. [Grasp the attitude] Which best describes the author’s tone in the fable?
A. Irony. B. Self-pity. C. Seriousness.
Ⅱ. Read for words:
1. Choose one best paraphrase or Chinese meaning for the underlined words.
(1) “I don’t know,” he answered sullenly. (Para. 1)
A. bad-tempered B. cheerfully C. quickly
(2) …and their knowledge of world history of geography is zilch. (Para. 8)
A. great B. unknown C. zero
2. Choose one best paraphrase for underlined expressions.
(1) One day last fall, I ran out of file folders and went to the local drugstore to buy more. (Para. 1)
A. 弄丢 B. 用光 C. 需要
(2) But this is just a tiny sliver of the problem. (Para. 8)
A. 事物的闪光面 B. 问题的解决之道 C. 问题的冰山一角
(3) To drive this message home to such young Americans, …(Para. 11)
A. To drive the massager home
B. To make the message understood
C. To leave a message
Ⅲ. Writing practice:
1. What do you think “learning” means to you?
2. Do you think learning and studying can change a person’s, even a country’s fate?